Commit 25d640da4a caused the following build warning:
../include/netlink/utils.h:47:15: note: expected 'const char **' but argument is of type 'char **'
route/link/inet6.c:300:11: warning: passing argument 2 of 'nl_cancel_down_bytes' from incompatible pointer type [enabled by default]
Revert the const char ** change.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Graf <tgraf@suug.ch>
Introduces the functions genl_register_family() and
genl_unregister_family() to register a Generic Netlink family
which does not implement a cachable type.
API users can direct received messages into genl_handle_msg() which
will validate the messages and call the callback functions defined
in the commands definition.
See test/test-genl.c for an example on how to use it.
These functions deprecate the function genlmsg_data() which did not
allow to specify the length of the user header. Use of the new API
will make code much clearer. The old function is still kept around
for backwards compatibility but marked deprecated in the API reference.
The HTB implementation in libnl uses units of microseconds in a number
of places where it seems TC is expecting time in units of ticks, which
causes actual rates much higher than requested. Additionally, libnl
uses USER_HZ for calculating buffer and cbuffer sizes, which can
result in much larger buffers than necessary on systems with high
resolution timers.
Note that the TBF qdisc uses microseconds incorrectly in two spots as
well, I fixed this but did not test.
The fw classifier allows a mask to be set, which is necessary for some
complex shaping/firewall scenarios. The attached patch adds support
for it to libnl.
- changes the modules hierarchy to better represent the set of libaries
- list the header file that needs to be included
- remove examples/doc from api ref that is included in the guide
- add references to the guide
- fix doxygen api linking for version 1.8.0
- readd doxygen mainpage to config file
- fix a couple of doxygen doc bugs
Apparently the change to have nl_recvmsgs() return the number of
parsed messages broke nl_wait_for_ack() among other applications.
This patch reverts to the old behaviour and provides a new function
nl_recvmsgs_report() which provides the additional information for
use by the cache manager and possibly other applications.
Reported-by: Scott Bonar <sbonar@cradlepoint.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Graf <tgraf@redhat.com>
The requirement to have the caller provide the socket does not
make much sense. Automatically allocate the socket if none was
provided.
This may also avoid some future abuse of reusing request sockets
for handling notifications.
Also rename cm_handle to cm_sock for clarity (no API change)
The function can be used to make a copy of an existing cache. It is very
similar to nl_cache_subset() except that it allows no filtering but
copies every object.
Signed-off-by: Thierry Reding <thierry.reding@avionic-design.de>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Graf <tgraf@redhat.com>
The plug qdisc supports two operations - plug and unplug. When the
qdisc receives a plug ("buffer") command via netlink request,
packets arriving henceforth are buffered until a corresponding unplug
command is received. Depending on the type of unplug ("release_one"
or "release_indefinite"), the queue can be unplugged indefinitely or
selectively.
The plug qdisc allows a user to implement network output buffering
(aka output commit), used commonly in checkpoint based fault tolerance
systems. It also supports a general purpose queue plug/unplug
functionality.
The associated kernel module is available in David Miller's net-next
tree, commit: c3059be16c9ef29c05f0876a9df5fea21f29724f
This patch introduces userspace tools and API, to control the qdisc
via netlink messages.
Signed-off-by: Shriram Rajagopalan <rshriram@cs.ubc.ca>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Graf <tgraf@redhat.com>
the neighbour parsing function was previously not accessible, so
custom callback functions had to handle the decoding itself.
rtnl_neigh_parse is introduced and implemented in much the same way
as rtnl_route_parse.
Signed-off-by: Brett Ciphery <brett.ciphery@windriver.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Graf <tgraf@redhat.com>
store type kind in rtnl_link independently. That would allow to use this
value even if type_ops are not present. This allows for example to
create devices of type unknown to libnl.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Pirko <jpirko@redhat.com>
Adds rtnl_link_enslave() / rtnl_link_release() providing a genreic
link enslaving/release API for use with all link types which use
the IFLA_MASTER property.
Although it has been possible to create bonding devices, enslave and
release using the regular link API. The added API simplifies usage
and hides some of the compatibility logic.
F.e. enslave() and release() will both verify that the master assignment
has in fact been changed and return -NLE_OPNOTSUPP if it did not.
Also the API will make sure to use RTM_NEWLINK or RTM_SETLINK depending
on what is availble.
Examples are provided in src/ as nl-link-enslave.c and nl-link-release.c
It has been a request that multiple libnl versions should be installabe
in parallel.
In order to achieve this, the basename of the library was changed to
libnl-3 which reflects the 3rd generation of libnl APIs. It also means
that release based library versioning is left behind and libtool
versioning is used instead.
Projects using pkgconfig will automatically link against the new library
basename and will not notice a difference.
The SO versioning is based on the glib model:
current := 100 * minor + micro - revision
revision := revision
age := age (number of backwards compatible versions)
This allows for multiple major versions to be installed in parallel. Pkg-config
files are adapted to provide appropriate cflags to find new header locations.
stores rtnl_link object in address if cache is availble. Provide access
via rtnl_addr_get_link() and rtnl_addr_set_link().
Add rtnl_addr_get() which searches a address cache for an address
matching ifindex and local address.